I'm trying out Fedora 10 as an option to Ubuntu 8.10 on my "workstation" (X2 3GHz, 4GB RAM, GF8600GT) and things have gone pretty well so far. I installed Fedora 10, did the usual hw setup using NVidia drivers from rpmfusion, tried glxgears and got about 4500 FPS but it also stuttered pretty badly. I thought this was kind of low and the stuttering was pretty horrible, so I installed Ubuntu 8.10 and glxgears pumped out 7500 FPS with no stuttering at all, using NVidia drivers from Ubuntu repos. I then reinstalled Fedora 10, because I really would like to get it to work, and needless to say the stuttering is still there.

Obviously, from the FPS, I do not have software rendering on so that's not the problem. I also disabled desktop effects in all test cases. What could cause the stuttering in Fedora, or what could I try to make it go away?

Everybody tells me glxgears is not a benchmarking tool and I'm very well aware of that, thank you very much

The issue is really very simple: glxgears runs smoothly under Ubuntu but not under Fedora. It's not an issue of cranking out FPS, it's an issue about throughput using the same application. Fedora does something to stop glxgears from performing as well as under Ubuntu, what is this "something"?

Everybody tells me glxgears is not a benchmarking tool and I'm very well aware of that, thank you very much

The issue is really very simple: glxgears runs smoothly under Ubuntu but not under Fedora. It's not an issue of cranking out FPS, it's an issue about throughput using the same application. Fedora does something to stop glxgears from performing as well as under Ubuntu, what is this "something"?

Your query is really lame.

You need to come with more info than 'glxgears stutters' to get a useful response. Try posting in bugzilla to the relevant developers section, don't bring attitude here boy.

edit

the point of doing the glaxium benchmark is to see if it's just a glxgears issue, ok?

I actually tried a couple of other OpenGL demos before to verify the problem and saw the same thing. But just to be nice, I tried Glaxium. Got the same result, decent frame rate (almost 500) but pretty horrible stuttering.

Oh, and the stuttering occurs even if I use an xterm only session.

The pesky thing with this "bug" is that it's pretty hard to figure out where it comes from and I thought somebody here maybe could have an idea what I should look for.

I actually tried a couple of other OpenGL demos before to verify the problem and saw the same thing. But just to be nice, I tried Glaxium. Got the same result, decent frame rate (almost 500) but pretty horrible stuttering.

Oh, and the stuttering occurs even if I use an xterm only session.

The pesky thing with this "bug" is that it's pretty hard to figure out where it comes from and I thought somebody here maybe could have an idea what I should look for.

ok, so you're getting it generally - that's better info Maybe we can determine whether it's a driver issue or related to some fedora specifc setting.

I've tried a whole host of different xorg.conf files, from only having the device section specifying the nvidia driver to having AIGLX, enabling/disabling the composite extension, explicitly specifying module paths, adding a bunch of options to the device section, with no positive results.

I checked the drivers versions before, they were identical.
I tried with selinux disabled, didn't help.
I tried with "nomodeset" in Grub, didn't help either.

Unfortunately, I did not save the Ubuntu xorg.conf file, but since I used that system fresh just minutes from a complete install, it was probably as empty as it could be, possibly with the extra things that nvidia-xconfig throws in which I also tried in Fedora.

Thanks for your suggestions btw, it would be nice to understand what is causing the problem, considering the heat that this little issue brings forth (not only on these forums ).

I checked the drivers versions before, they were identical.
I tried with selinux disabled, didn't help.
I tried with "nomodeset" in Grub, didn't help either.

Unfortunately, I did not save the Ubuntu xorg.conf file, but since I used that system fresh just minutes from a complete install, it was probably as empty as it could be, possibly with the extra things that nvidia-xconfig throws in which I also tried in Fedora.

Thanks for your suggestions btw, it would be nice to understand what is causing the problem, considering the heat that this little issue brings forth (not only on these forums ).

,

Well we've got to pin down the differences between Ubuntu and fedora so you're gonna have to confirm the Ubuntu xorg.conf.

As I've said, I'm also running an nvidia 8600GT (albeit the mobile version) and it works fine in both 32bit and 64bit F10 without any configuration, so your experience seems unlucky.

Problem is, you won't get too much sympathy from the developers since it's a proprietary driver. Did you try the default driver "nv" at all

All that the imbeciles can say is, "glxgears is not a benchmark, therefore your problem does not exist." Ignore those imbeciles.

Shutup brebs, If the initial post is so lame then it deserves that sort of response.

Ubuntu is a different OS with a different kernel, different config files.

If something works smooth in Windows but not fedora we're not gonna suggest install windows are we?

If your solution is to install the ubuntu kernel and config files (ie basically make it more like Ubuntu) then suggest that and how to go about it, don't call people imbecile. Or work out the kernel patch that makes it work.

Firstly, let's focus on the important issue here. Sideways, do you UK people use "gonna" too? I thought that was just on the North American continent.
Ok, to be serious for a moment.....let's all try to not call names, because that's usually the start of a thread deteriorating from interesting and helpful to getting closed.

I don't know if we can handle two stevea's here either.

I'm being a bit whimsical, obviously, but I'm serious. Let's all keep it friendly--as my mom used to say, (and probably still does) if you can't say something nice, don't say anything. (Until she gets mad, Mom's a terror sometimes.)

I would say though, that something working in Ubuntu and not Fedora is common--no, no, just still trying to be funny.

Actually, if something works in Ubuntu and not Fedora, I would think there's a better chance of getting it working in Fedora as well--it's not like something working in Windows but not Linux--there's far less difference.

Anyway, back the to the regularly scheduled program, but please keep it nice.

Thanks to all, from someone who has frequently benefited from posts by both Brebs and Sideways. Also, sideways is the only one who ever rickrolled me, so he will always merit a certain amount of respect from me.

<Goes off into rant about years of Internet surfing and avoiding viruses and malware while in Windows, but no.....he types with a 2 year old on his lap and his avatar is a panda!! A panda fercryinoutloud, who would have suspected.....>

Here in the US too. The late Leo Durocher, a baseball manager, (it's sort of like cricket but with round bats) , was once told he wasn't nice. His answer was, "Nice guys finish last," which, unfortunately, has become a bit of an adage in the US.

I *still* want to know about your use of gonna.

As for calling you stupid, well, if *I* call *you* stupid, you can always say, "rickrolled by a stupid person--what does that make you?"

Although as a comedian (I've forgotten who) once said, there are advantages to being stupid, it takes away the responsibility.

What are you, stupid????

Well, errm, yeah. Is that a problem?

(It doesn't work in fights with wives though. As someone once said, and women probably say the same about us, there are two schools of thought in arguing with a woman. Neither one works.)